Anyone tempted to take the "serious charges" seriously should note the published record conflicts with Lennon's "charges" posted in June: Although Effie Mona Mack may believe too much of _Roughing It_, she states that "it was in Virginia City that he became a full-fledged writer" (_M.T. in Nevada_, 1947, p. vii). By 1963, Bernard Taper describes _R.I._ as "semifiction" (xxi) and states that "San Francisco and the Far West were important to Twain . . . just how important has only in recent years been sufficiently recognized. It was here that . . . he entered upon his real vocation. . . . here in the Far West it was that he can be said to have become a writer, and the kind of writer that he was to be" (_M.T.'s San Francisco_, 1963, p. x). California's 1973 paperback printing of _R.I._ states "There is no corroborating evidence . . . to substantiate the story of the blind lead in the Wide West mine" (endnote, 583) and describes the book as "primarily . . . humorous fiction" (p. 2). Lennon essentially "charges" that what was already known in 1973 was stolen from her in the 1980's or 1990's. The 1994 _R.I._ has more extensive endnotes with their sources well-documented. But it contains nothing linked to Lennon or her M.T. books (which lack endnotes or other sufficient documentation of her sources). Nigey Lennon states in her 1982 _M.T. in California: The Turbulent California Years of Samuel Clemens_ that "The staff of the Mark Twain Papers project at Bancroft Library (University of California, Berkeley) was extremely good-natured and helpful to me during my whirlwind tour of their facilities. Likewise, Robert H. Hirst, present editor of the Mark Twain Papers, was very kind in giving me a copy of his thesis" (p. 6). I'll close since I have reached a point of agreement with one of Lennon's statements: The staff of the Mark Twain Papers project is extremely good-natured--even when provoked. larry marshburne